NEWS ROUNDUP
Grocery talks, Hanjin bolts Portland, labor warns Obama…
Monday, October 21, 2013
GROCERY STRIKE
ALSO see coverage in today’s (Longview) Daily News, The Olympian, and The Oregonian.
Meanwhile, The Seattle Times is polling the question: Will you cross a picket line to buy your groceries?
LOCAL
► In the PS Business Journal — Legislative task force crafts incentives to win Boeing 777X assembly — A task force of 12 legislative leaders, which is seeking ways to persuade Boeing Co. to build the 777X in Everett, plans to meet for the third time in Seattle Monday. The bipartisan 777X Legislative Task Force, announced by Gov. Jay Inslee Oct. 2 at the Governor’s Aerospace Summit in Everett, is trying to develop tangible actions that can be taken by the Legislature to persuade Boeing to assemble the plane in Everett.
ELECTION
ALSO at The Stand — Check out the Washington State Labor Council’s 2013 election endorsements
► In the Columbian — Washington’s GMO vote will be scrutinized nationally — Supporters and opponents of labeling genetically engineered food will watch the Evergreen State closely Nov. 5, when Washington voters decide whether many genetically modified organisms, or GMOs, sold here should include such information on their packaging. It’s the only initiative of its kind to go before voters in a U.S. state this fall, and opponents of GMO labeling have raised a record-breaking amount of money in attempts to defeat it.
ALSO at The Stand — Here’s why the WSLC supports Initiative 522 (by Nicole Grant)
OBAMACARE
► At Politico — White House employs ‘tech surge’ to address federal Obamacare website — The Obama administration Sunday said it’s called on “the best and brightest” tech experts from both government and the private sector to help fix the troubled website at the root of the Obamacare enrollment problems.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Good thing we didn’t listen to the Republicans in the minority of our State Legislature. They fought against (and voted against) against establishing our own Washington Health Benefits Exchange, in favor of accepting whatever the feds set up.
NATIONAL
► In the LA Times — CNBC goes to school on Social Security, flunks out (by Michael Hiltzik) — A couple of well-heeled anchor-reporters for CNBC — the type of people who need never beg for lunch dates among Wall Street bankers — Friday batted around the supposed threat to the republic posed by hordes of seniors collecting Social Security benefits. Unfortunately for them, their interviewee was Damon Silvers, policy director for the AFL-CIO and one of the best informed and fiercest defenders of Social Security in Washington. If they listened, they learned something. The evidence is they didn’t listen.
► In today’s NY Times — Questions surround deaths of 2 Bay Area transit workers as strike continues — The two workers, a contractor and an employee of the transit system, known as BART, were inspecting a section of track in the East Bay when an out-of-service train under computer control struck them.
► At Huffington Post — Majority of Americans think ‘it’s bad for America’ that Republicans control the U.S. House — Fifty-four percent think it’s bad that Republicans control the House, the CNN poll found. That’s up from 43% in December 2012, during the last fiscal standoff. The figure is the first time a majority thought Republican control was bad for the country since CNN started asking in December 2010.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
New research shows Alisha is far from alone. It might come as a surprise that most Americans on public assistance programs work. In fast food, workers rely on public assistance programs in particularly large numbers because jobs in the industry just don’t pay them enough. Fast-food jobs pay so little that 52 percent of the families of front-line fast food workers need to rely on public assistance programs, costing taxpayers nearly $7 billion a year. The cost is highest in California, at $717 million each year.
ALSO at The Stand — Low fast-food wages cost state’s taxpayers
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.